top of page
Start Now

Artists

  • Youtube
  • Spotify
  • Instagram
  • X
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg

Pat Jam

Pat Jam is an underground electronic music artist who surfaced in the late 1990s with a series of hard-edged, experimental tracks rooted in the evolving club and rave culture of the time. While little is known about the artist’s background, Pat Jam’s work captured the raw energy of the scene with an unapologetically bold sound.

One of the standout releases is “The Squeeler” (1998), a track marked by driving rhythms, industrial undertones, and distorted synth textures. Released on vinyl, the single appealed to DJs looking for peak-hour intensity and underground flair. The track was pressed and distributed during a period when vinyl still dominated the club circuit, and its sound reflects that era’s love for darker, uncompromising electronic music.

Another track, “Master and Slave,” continues in a similar vein—stripped-down and rhythm-focused, with a hypnotic tension that fits well within the harder side of late-’90s club sets. Available on select digital platforms today, the track offers a rare glimpse into Pat Jam’s niche sonic world.

Though not widely known, Pat Jam represents a corner of electronic music where mystery, experimentation, and raw club energy intersect. A name remembered by collectors, crate diggers, and underground music archivists.

placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg

Pat Jam

Pat Jam is an underground electronic music artist who surfaced in the late 1990s with a series of hard-edged, experimental tracks rooted in the evolving club and rave culture of the time. While little is known about the artist’s background, Pat Jam’s work captured the raw energy of the scene with an unapologetically bold sound.

One of the standout releases is “The Squeeler” (1998), a track marked by driving rhythms, industrial undertones, and distorted synth textures. Released on vinyl, the single appealed to DJs looking for peak-hour intensity and underground flair. The track was pressed and distributed during a period when vinyl still dominated the club circuit, and its sound reflects that era’s love for darker, uncompromising electronic music.

Another track, “Master and Slave,” continues in a similar vein—stripped-down and rhythm-focused, with a hypnotic tension that fits well within the harder side of late-’90s club sets. Available on select digital platforms today, the track offers a rare glimpse into Pat Jam’s niche sonic world.

Though not widely known, Pat Jam represents a corner of electronic music where mystery, experimentation, and raw club energy intersect. A name remembered by collectors, crate diggers, and underground music archivists.

placeholder.jpg
placeholder.jpg
bottom of page